Statements Made By Parties' Counsel Acting As Authorised Agents Are Binding & Operate As Estoppel: J&K&L High Court
Reiterating a fundamental principle governing courtroom proceedings, the High Court of Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh has held that statements and consent given by advocates, acting as authorised agents of litigants, are binding on the parties and operate as an estoppel in law. The Court made it clear that once an order is passed with such consent, a party cannot subsequently challenge it merely because it has had a change of mind.
Justice Wasim Sadiq Nargal made these observations while dismissing a writ petition that sought to assail a consent based remand order passed by the Revisional Authority in a land partition dispute.
The dispute arose out of partition proceedings concerning a joint land. The private respondents, claiming to be co-sharers, initiated partition proceedings under Section 105 of the Jammu and Kashmir Land Revenue Act. Earlier, the Tehsildar had suspended the partition proceedings after recording that the applicants were not in possession of the land and advised them to institute a civil suit for possession in terms of Rule 12 of the Jammu and Kashmir Land Revenue (Partition) Rules, 1970. This order was never challenged and attained finality.
Subsequently, however, the Tehsildar passed another order directing eviction of the petitioner and delivery of possession to the private respondents. Aggrieved, the petitioner approached the Revisional Authority.
The Revisional Authority remanded the matter to the Tehsildar with a direction to proceed with the partition strictly in accordance with the applicable Partition Rules and after affording an opportunity of hearing to all concerned. This order was passed with the consent of learned counsel appearing for both parties.
Despite having consented to the remand, the petitioner challenged the said order before the High Court, contending that the revenue authorities lacked jurisdiction to proceed further once the earlier order under Rule 12 had been passed.
At the outset, Justice Nargal noted that the remand order did not finally determine the rights of the parties. It observed,
“A bare perusal of the operative portion of the order shows that no prejudice has been caused to the petitioner, as the direction to the Court below is only to proceed in accordance with the Partition Rules after providing an opportunity of hearing to the interested persons/parties.”
The Court emphasised that the authority below was only required to first satisfy itself whether partition was permissible under the Rules, after granting due hearing.
Dealing with the core issue, Justice Nargal underscored the binding nature of consent given through counsel. The Court categorically held,
“Once the order, which is the subject matter of the present petition, was passed by the Revisional Authority with the consent of learned counsel for the parties, the petitioner is estopped in law from questioning the same through the medium of the present petition.”
The Court reiterated that advocates act as authorised agents of the parties they represent, and their statements before the Court have binding legal effect.
Relying on settled precedent, the Court further observed,
“In the absence of any plea of fraud, coercion or patent lack of jurisdiction, a consent order cannot ordinarily be reopened.”
Referring to the Supreme Court's ruling in Ajanta LLP v. Casio Keisanki Kabushiki Kaisha, the Court recorded,
“A judgment by consent is intended to stop litigation between the parties just as much as a judgment resulting from a decision of the Court at the end of a long drawn-out fight.”
It was further noted that even an alleged mistake cannot be a ground to alter a consent decree unless the mistake is patent or obvious.
Interim Stay Vacated, Proceedings to Continue
Applying these principles to the facts of the case, the High Court found no illegality or jurisdictional error in the order of the Revisional Authority. Consequently, the interim stay granted earlier was vacated.
The Court directed that the parties be relegated back to the revenue authority, observing,
“The ends of justice would be met if the interim restraint is lifted and the matter is permitted to proceed in accordance with the Partition Rules, after affording opportunity of hearing to all concerned.”
Case Title: Sikander Sharma Vs Addl Commissioner Jammu and Ors.
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (JKL)